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The Myth of Senseless Violence

People have a fascination with something called
“senseless violence”. The term originated in Dutch police reports and media
stories in the 90s (zinloos geweld),
but has since then found its way into other languages as well. It refers to
violence that is unprovoked, random, excessive, ruthless, and above all devoid
of meaning.[i] Perpetrators have no discernible motive, and are not
accountable to reason. Some scholars call it ‘autotelic violence’, violence that
is committed for its own sake.[ii] Most people who use the phrase, believe that senseless
violence is an especially troubling phenomenon, and that it is on the rise in
our societies. Here are some recent headlines from Dutch newspapers that
illustrate the extent of public concern: ‘Senseless violence among youth on the
rise’. ‘More and more senseless violence’, ‘Senseless violence is increasing’, ‘Yet
another incident of senseless violence’. In April 2006, eighty thousand people
marched silently through the streets of Brussels to protest against senseless
violence, after a high school student had been stabbed to death in a Brussels
train station when two thugs had attempted to steal his MP3 player.

Some people blame the perceived increase in senseless
violence on the rampant individualism of our society. The social fabric is
unraveling, authorities are disappearing, everyone is living on their own
little island. Others blame neoliberalism and its culture of ruthless
competitiveness. Still others point to secularization and the loss of a moral
framework that binds us together. If the universe itself is meaningless, why
care about anything? Should we really be surprised to see so much blind
aggression and wanton destruction? Just look at the obscene violence of Islamic
State (IS) and other terrorist groups. Is this not the ultimate manifestation
of nihilism, utterly devoid of any meaning or sense?

But this fascination with senseless violence, as I
will try to show in this chapter, seriously leads us astray. Policymakers and
police authorities would do well to reject the concept. It satisfies certain
psychological needs and taps into certain moral intuitions, but it has little
or nothing to do with reality. In the real world, violence is rarely senseless.
It is not random and haphazard, but driven by rational motives and
justifications, and governed by its own internal logic. If we want to prevent
violent acts, we need to understand the motivations of the perpetrators, rather
than portraying their behaviour as random, mysterious, devoid of reason. Senseless
violence, to the extent that it exists at all, should be the least of our
worries. In fact, the more meaningful the violence, the more dangerous. It is
not the senseless brute striking at random that you should worry about, but the
perpetrator with rational reasons for his (it’s usually a man) violent
behavior.

First I will give an overview of the different ways in
which violence can be meaningful from the perspective of its perpetrators. In
particular, I will explain how illusions—both homely illusions in our personal
relationships as well as collective ideological delusions—can inspire and
rationalize violence. Then I will try to explain why violence that makes
perfect sense for the perpetrator is still regarded as ‘senseless’ by many
people. The root of this inability to comprehend the rational motivations of
perpetrators lies in the psychology of victim narratives and the myth of Pure
Evil. Finally, I will apply these insights to one of the most extreme forms of
violence today, and I will try to make sense of the inability of policymakers
and analysts to make sense of it: the atrocities committed by the group known
as Islamic State.

Rational
violence

There are many ways in which violence can be a
rational, or even sensible, course of action. First, and most obviously,
violence can be a very effective way to remove something or someone standing in
your way. As governments like to argue, ‘the use of force’ is sometimes a necessary
evil to maintain order and prevent more harm. In zero-sum
games – e.g. competition for scarce goods – one party’s loss is the other’s
gain. In such situations, the parties are ‘obstacles’ to each other, and
violence can be an eminently rational strategy in pursuit of their respective
goals. Less obviously, violence can also be used as a deterrent or warning to prevent
more violence. It can be used to settle a score, to exact revenge, or to assert
dominance. Even excessive and sadistic violence can have a strategic logic, as in
organized crime rings or street gangs. It establishes your reputation as a bad hombre, a short-tempered and vicious
maniac who is not to be messed with.

Contrary to what many people think, violence also
often has a moral dimension. Not only do people have no moral qualms about resorting
to violence, but sometimes they think it is their moral duty. In honor cultures, people are required to punish traitors,
defectors and other disobedient group members (this is known as ‘altruistic
punishment’). Families may even have a moral duty to kill a member of their own
that has dishonored them. If they refrain from using violence, they themselves
will be judged or punished by the community. ‘Violence is not the opposite of
morality’, explains the moral psychologist Jan
Verplaetse, ‘but rather represents a moral system in its own right.’[iii] Of course the fact that most violence is meaningful
from the perspective of the perpetrator, does not mean that we should condone
or justify it. It also does not mean that we should automatically take the specific
rationalizations of perpetrators at face value. Sometimes people can dream up a
bogus excuses for their violent acts, which cover up their true, underlying motivations.
For example, racial lynching were often justified by some trumped-up charges of
misdemeanor. Perpetrators did not necessarily believe those charges, but their
violence can still be called ‘meaningful’ from their perspective, in the sense
that they used it as a means to intimidate and subordinate a racial minority.[iv]

Here I want to focus on the different ways in which illusions—defined as beliefs that fail
to correspond with reality—can bestow meaning on violence. Illusions can have
dangerous side-effects, even when they seem innocuous at first. Sometimes
violence is prompted by relatively mild illusions, which deviate only slightly
from the truth, but sometimes it is inspired by grandiose delusions that are
completely detached from the real world. Sometimes these violence-inspiring
illusions refer to ourselves, and sometimes they concern the world around us.

Moral
illusions

There is one type of illusion that affects virtually
every perpetrator of violence, and which is the primary driving force behind
aggression: the illusion of moral righteousness. This illusion belongs to the
category of positive illusions, which
have been studied extensively by psychologists.[v] They are relatively mild, flattering misconceptions
about ourselves and our personal future, to which nearly everyone is
susceptible at least some of the time. Deep down all of us see ourselves as
fundamentally decent, honest, righteous, and virtuous human beings. Even
perpetrators of violence are almost always convinced that they do the right
thing. We believe that we had good reason to have reacted as strongly as we
did, that we did not do it on purpose, that in the end we meant well, that our
action was provoked the other party, and hence that the victim was also to
blame.

Perpetrators see their violent acts as a logical and
inevitable outcome of a situation, a sensible course of action, and they tend
to minimize the suffering they caused. Victims, for their part, tend to
emphasize their innocence, the pain they have suffered, or the permanent scars
left by the trauma. Perpetrators quickly forget about the incident, while
victims have a long memory. Steven Pinker, in his book The Better Angels of Our Nature, calls it the ‘Moralization Gap’.[vi] Psychological studies show that people are able to
effortlessly switch perspectives, depending on the position in which they find
themselves. It gets really tricky when both parties wallow in their sense of
victimhood, and each sees the other as a brutal aggressor. This can lead to an
escalating cycle of violent revenge.

Illusions of moral superiority are nurtured and
maintained on both sides because human interactions are ambiguous and open to
different interpretations. We all live in the same reality, but we all have the
tendency – to the extent that we can get away with it – to bend that reality a
little in our favor. We are all advocates of our own righteous cause, like
lawyers trying their best to defend the interests of their clients. And we
allow our desires and wishes to flourish in the gaps of uncertainty left by the
flexing timbers of an ambiguous world. But even just mild illusions of
superiority can quickly get out of hand. As the situation unfolds, each party’s
construal is deviating farther from the truth, and pulling in opposite
directions. Within our respective frameworks, each of the steps we take is a
reasonable one, an appropriate response to the ‘provocation’ or ‘carelessness’
of the other party. And so the wedge between our views of the world is driven
deeper and deeper. An innocuous encounter can progressively escalate into a
violent conflict, with only a modicum of initial bias on each side. Who was the
first to offend whom? Did he stare at me like that to provoke me? What was the
subtext of that joke exactly? Did he just brush against me on purpose? Before
you know it, both of you are wallowing in your own righteousness, incensed with
the obvious rudeness, aggression, and ill will of the other party. In a
protracted feud or vendetta, both parties tend to forget over time how the
conflict originated, or else their memory of the initial incident will become
increasingly distorted. Think about generation-spanning blood feuds among
criminal gangs, in which two rival clans take turns to avenge the previous
round of the conflict, while no-one quite remembers how it all started.

A cycle of violence can be exacerbated by a mechanism
that seems counterintuitive at first. Most people think that an outburst of
violence can help to ‘vent’ our pent-up frustrations. This is the hydraulic model of the mind, popularized
by Sigmund Freud, which conceives of the mind as a kind of closed circuit in
which psychic energy is flowing, like steam in a hydraulic engine. According to
this model, when pent-up ‘psychic energy’ (in the form of anger or frustration)
causes the pressure to become too high, we need to ‘let off some steam’ to
prevent the machine from exploding.[vii]

In reality the reverse is true. Studies have shown
that ‘venting’ aggression makes us more aggressive, contrary to what the
hydraulic model predicts. The theory of cognitive
dissonance, developed by psychologist Leon Festinger, explains this
phenomenon. As I mentioned earlier, people like to think of themselves as
basically decent and good, not as aggressive brutes or hotheads. If they then
do resort to violence, they seek some way to align their overt actions with
their self-image. A typical rationalization goes as follows: ‘I’m a reasonable
person. I’m definitely not the type of guy who just punches someone in the face
without reason. But yeah, I did just punch this guy in the face. Well, he
must’ve really deserved it, or else I wouldn’t have done this. What an asshole.
He’d better not come round here again.’ An earlier outburst of violence serves
as the justification of the next one. So a single act of real or perceived
violence, ratcheted up by moral righteousness on both sides, can lead to an
escalating cycle of aggression. One begins to wonder why there isn’t a lot more violence in the world.[viii]

Ideological
illusions

In almost every form of violence, the illusion of
moral righteousness is somehow involved. But this factor alone is not
sufficient to explain large-scale, organized, gruesome violence. This kind of
violence is often inspired by collective ideological illusions about the world,
whether religious or otherwise. The higher the death toll and the more gruesome
the violence, the greater the chance that ideology is involved. As philosopher
Sam Harris put it: ‘Whenever you hear that people have begun killing
noncombatants intentionally and indiscriminately, ask yourself what dogma
stands at their backs. What
do these freshly minted killers believe?’[ix]

And indeed, many of the most horrible atrocities in world history have
happened because some group of people believed some bizarre things about the
universe that were immune to criticism and empirical refutation. Because of
their dogmatic but sincere faith, they were convinced that they were doing the
right thing, or at least what the circumstances required of them. Perhaps the
most dangerous category of illusions is utopian thinking, which promises the
arrival, in the not too distant future, of some form of paradise or perfect
society. Such utopian beliefs provide a rational justification for instrumental
violence: to reach a noble goal, you have to clear away some obstacles.
Sometimes these obstacles are concrete and inanimate, but sometimes they are
people who refuse to believe in the coming of the promised utopia, or who
actively oppose it.

Because utopian belief systems predict an end state
that is infinitely valuable, it sets up a ‘pernicious utilitarian calculus’, as
Steven Pinker wrote. There, beyond the horizon, the mirage of a perfect world
is shimmering, an infinitely valuable reward. And does not a perfect end
justify the most drastic sacrifices? ‘In a utopia, everyone is happy forever,
so its moral value is infinite. … How many people would it be permissible to
sacrifice to attain that infinite good? A few million can seem like a pretty
good bargain.’[x]

Consider the utopian illusions of communism, according
to which Karl Marx is the discoverer of a set of ineluctable laws governing the
course of human history. In the dialectical schema of Marxism, capitalism was
doomed to collapse under its own internal contradictions, sparking a revolution
that would lead to the temporary dictatorship of the proletariat, and
eventually paradise on earth: the class-free society, in which hunger and
oppression and strife would be no more than a distant memory. These were the
ideals envisioned by the Bolsheviks when they grabbed power in 1917 in
revolutionary Russia. In their attempts to hasten the ‘birth-pangs’ of history,
they felt perfectly justified in installing a regime of terror and ruthlessly
suppressing all forms of dissent. Within their dogmas, their reasoning was
impeccable: ‘This is just temporary. Soon we’ll be living in a paradise. Just
hang on.’

Of course paradise never arrived, because reality does
not tend to comply with our desires. The communist experiments of the past
century have all failed because they were based on a completely unfounded view
of history, and also an erroneous conception of human nature. But irrational
belief systems can be tenacious. When threatened by reality, they often develop
a protective screen around themselves, to ward off refutation. Imprisoned in
their Marxist belief system, communist leaders like Lenin and Mao came up with
a straightforward and sensible explanation for the failures of
collectivization: hostile reactionary forces were at work trying to sabotage
the revolution. And of course, for the sake of the coming utopia, those forces
had to be eliminated. The ideological need for imaginary saboteurs and traitors
was commensurate with the magnitude of these leaders’ failures.[xi] If necessary, whole populations had to be
exterminated, if they didn’t behave in the way demanded by revolutionary dogma.

Delusions and utopian thinking also played a large
role in the other major politically-motivated catastrophe of violence of the
20th century, namely the one brought about by Nazi Germany. For a variety of
reasons, the leading ideologues of National Socialism had convinced themselves
that the Jews were a blight on humanity, a sort of parasitical life form that
needed to be expunged from the future utopia of the Third Reich. While the
Nazis were drawing from a rich history of Christian demonization of the Jews,
with antisemitism having been rampant throughout Europe for a very long time,
the immediate cause of the pathological hatred of the Jewish people in Germany
was the ‘stab-in-the-back’ myth. It is important to note that this myth, in
turn, was born out of the illusion of national and racial superiority that had
foundered in the trenches of the First World War. Not only had the Germans lost
the war in 1918; they had subsequently been humiliated by the Allied nations at
Versailles, with significant loss of territory, forced demilitarization, and
crippling financial reparations. That sense of injured pride was the germ of a
new, more sinister myth. If victory in the war had rightfully belonged to
Germany, but they had lost anyway, then there was only one possible
explanation: the Jews. If only those filthy vermin had not betrayed them and
sabotaged the German war efforts, then of course Germany would have won the
war. That germ of an idea found fertile soil in other existing conspiracy
theories about cosmopolitan World Jewry, notably as expounded in the infamous Protocols of the Elders of Zion. This document,
which is now known to be a 19th century forgery from Czarist Russia, pretends
to contain the proceedings of a secret Zionist conference, in which evil plans are
hatched for world domination and the destruction of European civilization.

Such conspiracy theories, blended with racial
pseudoscience and a dose of social Darwinism, proved to be a highly inflammable
combination. After years of indoctrination by Nazi propaganda, tapping into
other historical sources of popular antisemitism, many Germans became convinced
that the Jews were indeed some sort of parasitic life form that had infiltrated
its way into German society, and needed to be contained or eliminated. The architects
of the Final Solution, as well as many members of the SS Einsatzgruppen carrying out
the systematic extermination of the Jewish race, were moral idealists, firmly
convinced that they were doing the right thing. This point is developed in a
brilliant (but disturbing) way in Jonathan
Littell’s historical novel Les Bienveillants, which gives the reader
the perspective of the Nazi perpetrator without interruption for more than 900
pages. Naturally, explains the main character, it was an unpleasant job to
shove women and children into a ditch and shoot them in the head, but if the
Master Race carried out its job dutifully and thoroughly, the world would be
liberated from a greater evil. The mechanism of cognitive dissonance that I
mentioned earlier also played a role in entrenching anti-Semitic beliefs and
justifying these atrocities. Those who carried out the executions—at first
often with reluctance and sometimes great distress, as Christopher Browning has
documented in his classical study Ordinary
Men—came to hate and despise their victims even more.[xii] Because they did not want to think of themselves as
vicious killers, they were internally desperate for some way to rationalize
their deeds.

Pure
Evil

Many people might find this analysis of the ‘rationality’
behind the Endlösung distasteful or even immoral, as if I am somehow
condoning or minimizing the Nazis’ atrocities. Indeed, many people do not want to understand the reasons and
motivations of horrible criminals like the Nazis. Here we arrive at the appeal
of the myth of ‘senseless violence’. If we are confronted with aggression,
naturally we want to identify the guilty party. In making such intuitive moral
judgments, we prefer to make a clean distinction between victims and
perpetrators. We want to sympathize with the former, and condemn the latter.
And it is easier to do this if you look at the perpetrator as nothing more than
a senseless brute, acting without any sensible reason whatsoever. As
psychologists Carol Tavris and Elliott Aronson express the point: ‘The
incomprehensibility of the perpetrator’s motives is a central aspect of the
victim identity and the victim story.’[xiii]

Intuitively, a perpetrator of violence cannot have reasonable motives, because
that would confound our moral judgments. A French proverb expresses the point: tout comprendre c’est tout pardonner. If we were to make the effort to understand violent
acts from the perspective of the perpetrator, then perhaps we would find
mitigating reasons or plausible justifications, or maybe even realize that it
was all based on a misunderstanding. That’s why people want to maintain, to the
extent that they can, that a perpetrator has no motives at all, or at least no motives that any reasonable
person would understand. Portraying violence as devoid of any sense makes it
easier for us to side with the victim and to increase our moral distance from
the perpetrator. Of course, this applies all the more when we ourselves are the
(perceived) victim of aggression. We maintain the myth of our own moral
righteousness by representing the violence of the perpetrator as unprovoked,
wanton, and senseless.

But does it make any sense to say that violence has no
sense at all, that the perpetrator has no discernible motive? There must be something that causes them to be
violent, right? If you scratch the surface of the concept of ‘senseless
violence’, you’ll find another, older belief, which the psychologist Roy
Baumeister named the Myth of Pure Evil. According to this myth, evil things in
this world are done by inherently wicked people, who desire nothing more than
to cause death and suffering.

In Western culture, evil as a force of nature is
personified by the devil, also known as Satan, Beelzebub, Lucifer, or simply
the Evil One. This creature, as the counterpart and mirror image of a good God,
is intrinsically and uncompromisingly malevolent. All he desires is to oppose,
and ultimately destroy, everything that is good. Similar figures can be found
not just in Abrahamic monotheism, but in cultures all across the world. They
take the form of demons, witches, evil spirits, or just some impersonal dark
force. In many cultures, it is also believed that ordinary human beings can be
in league with the forces of evil. In Christian mythology, for example, witches
were thought to have communion with Satan himself during their ‘black Sabbath’.

Among religious traditionalists, belief in the devil
and his minions is still widespread. But even in our secular culture, the myth
of Pure Evil still has considerable influence, albeit in less obvious guises.
In the secular version of the myth, Evil has become internalized. The devil no
longer exists as a real entity, but he lives on as a metaphor for the dark side
of human nature. Just like the devil, the evil inside of us cannot be explained
in terms of reasonable, ulterior motives. Instead, evil is an inexplicable and
fundamental mental principle. This internalized Evil, shorn of supernatural
elements, can be found in early scientific theories of violence. The ethologist
Konrad Lorenz, for example, theorized that the human mind has an innate
aggression instinct, a biologically rooted drive to fight and destroy.[xiv] More influential still are Sigmund Freud’s
speculative theories about the unconscious, a dark abode in the inner recesses
of our mind teeming with forbidden desires and perversions, predominantly
related to sex and aggression.

We also see traces of the myth of Pure Evil in our
everyday language and popular culture: we wrestle with our ‘inner demons’, or are
tempted by our ‘dark side’. Some expressions also refer to the perceived
animalistic roots of evil: people engage in ‘beastly’ or ‘bestial’ violence, as
in Hillary Clinton’s description of young delinquents as ‘superpredators’.[xv] In Dostoyevsky’s The
Brothers Karamazov, we read: ‘In every man, of course, a beast lies
hidden--the beast of rage, the beast of lustful heat at the screams of the
tortured victim, the beast of lawlessness let off the chain’[xvi]

Many popular movies and comic books are populated with
one-dimensional villains, whose only raison
d’être is to wreak havoc and perpetrate evil. The ultimate goals of the
forces of Evil often remain vague and nondescript, like those of the devil in
religious traditions (is it dominion over the world or its destruction?).[xvii] The modern incarnation of this Pure Evil, which also abounds
in more sophisticated literature and films, is the psychopathic mass murderer. People’s
fascination with these evil creatures is limitless. Hannibal Lecter, the
cannibalistic psychopath from Thomas Harris’s novels, became a cultural icon as
portrayed by Anthony Hopkins in The
Silence of the Lambs. Other celebrated psychopaths include Patrick Bateman,
the wealthy and slick banker from Bret Easton Ellis’s American Psycho, Alex from Anthony Burgess’ A Clockwork Orange, and The Joker from Christopher
Nolan’s The Dark Knight.

All these figures are heavily colored by the myth of
Pure Evil. Bateman is an inveterate sadist, who derives diabolical pleasure
from torturing his victims, without any discernible motive apart from relieving
his boredom. Hannibal Lecter eats his victims – which may qualify as an
instrumental motive – but he also likes to torture them first. How he developed
this evil character is fundamentally mysterious, as he himself explains to
Clarice Starling during an interrogation: ‘Nothing happened to me, Officer
Starling. I happened. You can’t reduce me to a set of influences.’[xviii] Alex and his droogs
relish their daily portion of senseless ultraviolence:
randomly beating up and torturing innocent people. They behave like incarnations of Freud’s Id, full of
aggressive and sexual urges that need to be regularly discharged. And
Christopher Nolan’s Joker likes to muse philosophically about what it is
exactly that he wants: ‘Do I really look like a guy with a plan? You know what
I am? I'm a dog chasing cars. I wouldn't know what to do with one if I caught
it!’

In short, the myth of pure and inexplicable Evil
exerts a strong attraction on the human imagination. The only problem is that
it has almost no connection to reality. One of the most surprising
characteristics of real-life villains, in complete contradiction with the myth
of Pure Evil, is that they think they have good, even morally justified reasons
for their violent deeds. The writer George R. R. Martin once expressed the
point nicely: ‘You don’t just have people who wake up in the morning and say, “What
evil things can I do today, because I’m Mr. Evil?” People do things for what
they think are justified reasons’.[xix] People who commit violence for no reason, like ‘Obviously
Evil’ movie villains—perhaps, for good measure, laughing diabolically at their
own fiendishness—are the stuff of fiction.

Contrary to the secular myth of Pure Evil – propounded
by Sigmund Freud and others – people have a natural aversion to violence against their conspecifics, which they need to
overcome. It is possible to become insensitive to killing other human beings,
and even to start enjoying it, but it usually requires hard practice. Many
seasoned criminals have bad memories about their first kill or act of violence.[xx]Sadism – enjoying the
infliction of gratuitous suffering – really exists, but it is a relatively
rare phenomenon, incapable of explaining large-scale atrocities. Moreover,
research suggests that it is an ‘acquired taste’, not an innate tendency.[xxi] And even when it does occur, sadism is not completely
‘senseless’, but is often an instrument to exact revenge, assert dominance, or
gain sexual gratification.

The
violence of the Islamic State

To illustrate how the myth of senseless violence leads
policy makers astray even today, let us have a look at the atrocities perpetrated
by the group known as the Islamic State. President Obama once remarked that IS stands
for a form of ‘extremist nihilism’, meaning that the group has no ideology and
stands for nothing. Obama’s Secretary of State John Kerry was even more
explicit, dismissing the group as ‘nothing more than a form of criminal
anarchy, nihilism which illegitimately claims an ideological and religious
foundation.’ And presidential candidate Hillary Clinton characterized IS as a ‘kind
of barbarism and nihilism’, which is ‘very hard to understand’ except in terms
of the ‘lust of for power … and the total disregard for human life’[xxii]

In fact, few atrocities are as meaningful and ‘rational’
as those committed by IS. Their madness has a method to it; their horrors are
driven by an internal logic. To see this, we have to understand the ideology of
IS, which can be summarized fairly easily. According to jihadism, a cosmic
battle is being waged between the forces of Good and Evil. It is drawn not along
economic or racial lines, but along purely religious ones. On one side of the line
we find the True Believers. They profess the existence of one (and only one)
supreme God, creator of heaven and earth, who has revealed himself in the form
of an infallible and eternal Book, which exists since the beginning of time,
and is co-existent with creation itself. On the other side we find the assorted
enemies of God: the unbelievers, hypocrites, apostates, idolaters and
crusaders, who are led by the Evil One himself. God has commanded the True
Believers to conquer the lands of the unbelievers and build a worldwide
caliphate, a perfect society in which divine Sharia law will be implemented. Conquered peoples are to be either
converted, enslaved (women and children), or exterminated. In principle, the
so-called People of the Book (mainly Christians and Jews) are allowed to live
under the caliphate, provided they submit to the dominance of Islam, accept a
position of religious apartheid, and pay special taxes (jizya).[xxiii] According to jihadi ideology, God has prearranged a
final showdown between the armies of Good and Evil in a place called Dabiq
(which, not coincidentally, was also the name of the professional-looking
official magazine of Islamic State), starring the Messiah (Mahdi), Satan and
Jesus, after which the End of Times will arrive and the material world will be
destroyed.

The most important justification for violence in
jihadi ideology is the concept of martyrdom. Believers who are killed on the
battlefield in their jihad against
the unbelievers, gain direct entrance to paradise (along with their families). For
ordinary non-martyred believers, their fate in the afterlife is far less secure.
They have to appear before God at the End of Days, and will be judged on the
basis of how they lived their life. If they piled up too many sins, they risk
eternal damnation. Martyrs, however, are allowed to skip this procedure. Indeed,
according to jihadists, the first drop of your blood that is spilled on the
battlefield instantly washes away all your sins (a myth that is strongly
reminiscent of the papal promises made to Christian crusaders in the middle
ages).[xxiv] Such a mindset can inspire – and render ‘meaningful’
– the most uncompromising and even suicidal acts of violence. The apocalyptic nature
of jihadism provides an additional reason for wanton violence: why restrain
yourself, or care about anything on earth, if the world will be annihilated
soon anyhow?[xxv]

Many
policymakers and commentators have failed to understand why the prospect of jihad is so attractive for young
Muslims, especially in Western Europe. On the one hand, the fear of hellfire is
part and parcel of the Islamic tradition, and has been instilled in the hearts
of many young Muslims. On the other hand, young Muslims living today are constantly
exposed to the temptations of modern life, such as sex, drugs, and alcohol. Many
seem torn between the religious traditions of their parents, and the hedonism
and liberalism of western societies. Many young people who find it hard to
resist the temptations of modern life, and who are afraid of appearing before
their creator, can undergo a sudden religious conversion, and become determined
to better their lives and atone for their sins. For such people, who become
ever more immersed into religious doctrines, the prospect of martyrdom can gradually
become quite appealing. Not only is it a way to devote yourself to a higher cause,
but it is the only guaranteed way to secure salvation in the afterlife. In this
way, fear of hell, combined with an awareness of your sinful ways, can be the
first step in a process of religious radicalization, which ends in the
willingness to commit violent acts of terror in the name of God.

Disbelief
about belief

Because of their extremely gruesome nature, many
people tend to see the violence of IS as ‘senseless’. Of course, people like Obama
and Clinton, also have their political reasons for ignoring or downplaying the
ideological motivations of religion, at least when talking in public. By
maintaining that IS is just a form of ‘nihilism’ or senseless barbarianism,
they can avoid facing some uncomfortable truths about Islamic scripture, or indeed
about their own Christian traditions. But there is an additional reason for the
inability of many people to confront the motivations and reasons of IS, and to
maintain the myth of senseless violence. In the wake of secularization and the
steady decline of religion in our societies, many western intellectuals –
including many liberal believers – have grown alienated from the traditional articles
of the Abrahamic faiths, and the power of religious devotion in general. Such
people find it exceedingly difficult to understand the mental universe of
religious fanatics. Religion, in their eyes, cannot be more than a convenient
pretext for violence, a façade disguising people’s ‘true’ motivations. This phenomenon
could be called disbelief about belief.[xxvi] Not only do godless Westerners fail to believe in
heaven and hell; they also find it hard to believe that anyone else would believe such nonsense. In the
particular case of apocalyptic jihadism, this temptation is understandable. It
is indeed hard to accept that anyone seriously believes those juvenile
fantasies about a heavenly brothel with 72 dark-eyed virgins and wine that
doesn't give you hangovers? And what about that cosmic End Battle, in which Jesus
(yes, the Jesus) will wield a flaming
sword to lead the armies of the True Believers? This sounds like the scenario
of a low-budget action movie or video game, not serious theology. And yet, some
people really believe this stuff, and we ignore the reality of their sincere
convictions at our peril.

Conclusion

People are reluctant to see violence as meaningful,
especially if it is extreme and gruesome. They prefer to think that evil is
something inexplicable, a fundamental primal force of nature. Perhaps they are
afraid that, in the words of Friedrich Nietzsche, ‘if you gaze long into an
abyss, the abyss also gazes into you.’ But these moral intuitions lead us
astray. Violence is hardly, if ever, completely senseless. Most of the time it
is rationally motivated, driven by ideas and convictions. Not only are the
worst atrocities of the modern era ‘meaningful’ in that sense, but without some
ideological or religious underpinning they would be unthinkable. Atrocities
that look random and devoid of sense from our vantage point, often make perfect
sense from the perspective of the people committing them. Only reasons can explain things like industrial-scale
killings in gas chambers, organized famines, ritualistic mass beheadings, and suicidal
terror attacks with passenger aircraft.

If policymakers want to understand and prevent
violence, they’d to well to discard the myth of senseless violence. It is
important that we understand the reasons and strategic logic behind violent
behaviour, especially in the case of organized and systematic violence. In the
case of the rise and fall of IS, the failure of policymakers and commentators to
take seriously the group’s ideology was far from inconsequential. For a long
time, they have continued to treat IS as a bunch of frustrated losers or
psychopaths, who would have been drawn to extreme violence anyhow, and who use
the ideological motivations merely as a pretext.[xxvii] As a consequence, they have failed to spot early
warning signs of radicalization, such as sudden religious conversions and
displays of piety, and they have underestimated the influence of specific
religious ideas, such as fear of hell and belief in martyrdom as the only sure way
to salvation.[xxviii]

The good news is that, if extreme violence is not
random or haphazard, but is instead driven by reasons, it can also be countered
with reasons. People are not inherently violent, and we are not born
with aggression drives or sadistic instincts. If we can understand the
strategic logic behind violent conflict, we can prevent those types of
situations from occurring. And if we understand the illusions that inspire ideological
violence, we can try to undermine and deconstruct them.[xxix] But in order to do so, the first thing we have to do
is get rid of the myth of senseless violence.

Acknowledgments: I wish you thank Neil Van Leeuwen for his critical
comments, and Nick Brown for carefully proof-reading this chapter.

[i]There is
another, weaker sense of “senseless”, which points to the futility of violent
conflict, or its failure accomplish some larger goal. An example is the following
claim: “The trench warfare during the First World War was a senseless waste of human life”. Even so,
both parties in the conflict had their reasons to continue the violence, once
it had started. Game theory describes the strategic logic of these situations
as “wars of attrition”.

[xvii]The
website TVtropes.orgoffers a
treasure trove of such clichés. For example, an ‘Omnicidal Maniac’ is villain
who, for reasons that are invariably hard to fathom, wants to destroy the whole
world or even reality itself. The trope ‘Obviously Evil’ refers to villains who
glorify and revel in their own fiendishness, and ‘The Dark Side’ to the
recurring cliché of a morally corrupt counterpart of the Force of Good..

[xviii]In Harris’s
later novels, however, the origins of Lecter’s evil are traced down do a
childhood trauma in Lithuania in 1944, when he witnessed the murder and
cannibalism of his little sister.

[xix] This applies even to those human beings who
approximate the myth of pure evil most closely: psychopathic serial killers.
Hard though it may be to believe, serial killers often see themselves as
victims, not as perpetrators. They point to an unhappy childhood, the
humiliations they have suffered from others, or the injustice done to them by
society. They also invariably minimize and downplay their deeds. Baumeister, ibid., pp. 47-52.

[xxii]References
to Clinton, Obama and Kerry’s statements can be found in this effective
rebuttal of the claim that IS represents ‘nihilism’: Marty Kaplan, ‘Jihadism
Isn’t Nihilism. What Everyone Gets Wrong About ISIS’, Alternet November 22, 2015.

[xxiii]A very
insightful essay on the ideology of IS: Graeme Wood, ‘What ISIS Really Wants’, The Atlantic, March 2015. A more
scholarly studies on religious terrorism: Mark Juergensmeyer (2005). Terror in
the Mind of God. Taylor
& Francis.

[xxiv]Andrew Dickson
White (1896) A History of the Warfare of
Science with Theology in Christendom, Chapter XI.

[xxv]The dogmas
about heaven and hell offer a direct justification for sadism, the same one
that was used by the Inquisitors and witch hunters in the Christian middle
ages. If the ‘merciful’ God himself will torture the infidels for all eternity
in the hereafter, why not give them a foretaste? This may explain why IS openly
flaunts its atrocities. Executions of gays, apostates and ‘crusaders’ are
captured with professional HD cameras, down to the last obscene detail, and
subsequently distributed through the official press agency of IS. Manuals for
terrorists contain instructions for adding shrapnel such as nails to bombs in
order to cause a maximum of gruesome injuries to the targeted enemy. An informative discussion of apocalyptic
strands in the religious traditions of both Judaism, Christianity and Islam can
be found in Gershom Gorenberg (2002). The End of Days: Fundamentalism and
the Struggle for the Temple Mount: Oxford University Press.

[xxix]See the work
of Quilliam, the anti-radicalization think tank of Maajid Nawaz, a Muslim
reformer and former Islamist. Maajid Nawaz
(2012). Radical: My journey from Islamist
extremism to a democratic awakening: Random House. For an example of a
counter-narrative addressed to jihadists, using reasonable arguments, see Nawaz’s
letter: ‘An Ex-Radical’s Open Letter to ISIS Fighters: Quit Now While You Can!’
Daily Beast, November 9, 14.

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I don't know, but can´t the Dutch campaign against senseless violence be understood through the lense of signalling theory, from within a framework of social dynamics? Thus, violence within the population is seen or promoted as, at best, a zero sum game, as long as cooperation is seen as a sign of the group´s fitness?